LegalandPublicPolicyConsiderationsoftheEUReferendum

Rolling Back Red Tape in the UK

On 19 April 2017, the day after the UK Prime Minister’s surprise General Election announcement, the Red Tape Initiative (RTI) was quietly launched in Westminster.

Established by Rt Hon Sir Oliver Letwin MP, who was in overall charge of the Cabinet Office until July 2016 and briefly head of the Brexit Unit after the Referendum, the RTI is a non-partisan project, bringing together “all three major UK-wide political parties to forge a consensus on the regulatory changes that could benefit both businesses and their employees in a post-Brexit Britain”.

Its advisory panel consists of leading Conservative, Liberal Democrat and Labour politicians – leavers and remainers – and it has a legal panel of eight lawyers, six of whom are QCs. We are pleased to be a member of that panel and Squire Patton Boggs will be providing pro bono legal assistance to the RTI.

Various bodies, including the TUC, CBI, BCC, IOD and FSB are working with the RTI to construct groups of experts from a range of industries to help identify changes that could quickly be made in specific areas of EU regulation, with immediate benefits for jobs and businesses in the UK. The Secretary of State for Business, Enterprise and Industrial Strategy has written to the RTI, welcoming its creation and offering the cooperation of his officials.

The first three areas that the RTI will investigate are:

the construction of housing;

the construction of infrastructure; and

training and apprenticeship.

It seems undeniable, whatever one’s view on Brexit, that there exist some EU regulations across a number of sectors which – uncontroversially – can be amended or repealed after the UK leaves the EU and it is these on which the RTI will focus. It is hoped that the amendment and repeal of a small number of EU regulations will have a significant positive impact on the UK’s GDP, although there are some who consider that the overall public appetite for deregulation is rather less in practice than in theory.

Sir Oliver has stated that the RTI is keen to hear from chief executives of companies big and small.

Please feel free to contact a member of our Brexit team or your usual contact at Squire Patton Boggs if you wish to discuss UK deregulation or any other aspect of Brexit.

About Squire Patton Boggs:

We are a Top 10 law firm with 15 European offices as part of a global network of 45 offices in 20 countries and over 1500 lawyers, we have specialist teams in virtually every sector and geography that may be affected by a Brexit. Our Public Policy teams in Europe, and particularly in Brussels, alongside our colleagues in Washington DC, have decades of experience in advocating to advance your business objectives.